Gabriel Garran

Portrait of Gabriel Garran by Fernand Michaud
Portrait of Gabriel Garran by Fernand Michaud

Gabriel Garran (pseudonym of Gabriel Gersztenkorn), born May 3, 1929 in Paris, is a Jewish-French actor and theater director.

Biography

Born to a French Jewish family of Polish origins in Paris, he was fled persecution in Vichy France at the age of 11. After World War II, he became an actor and in 1965 founded the 'Théâtre de la Commune' in Aubervilliers, the first permanent theater in French suburbs[1][2]. He managed that theater in the years 1960–1984 and staged numerous plays in it. At the end of the 1970s, Garran founded the Théâtre International de Langue Française (TILF) which focused on presenting plays from African Frech-speaking countries.[3]

Cinema

Assistant director

Director

  • 1983 : Brûler les planches

Books

  • Le Rire Du Fou. Paris: C. Bourgois, 1976. ISBN 2267000245
  • Géographie française. Paris: Flammarion, 2014. ISBN 9782081310001
  • Filiation. Paris: Riveneuve. 2017. ISBN 978-2-36013-446-5

References

  1. Guiat, Cyrille. The French and Italian communist parties: Comrades and culture, pp. 105-111. Psychology Press, 2003.
  2. Bradby, David. Modern French Drama 1940-1990, pp. 143. Cambridge University Press, 1991.
  3. Paré, François. Exiguity: Reflections on the margins of literature, pp. 113. Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press, 2006.


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